Renal endosomes contain angiotensin peptides, converting enzyme, and AT(1A) receptors. (17/721)

Kidney cortex and proximal tubular angiotensin II (ANG II) levels are greater than can be explained on the basis of circulating ANG II, suggesting intrarenal compartmentalization of these peptides. One possible site of intracellular accumulation is the endosomes. In the present study, we tested for endosomal ANG I, ANG II, angiotensin type 1A receptor (AT(1A)), and angiotensin converting enzyme (ACE) activity and determined whether these levels are regulated by salt intake. Male Sprague-Dawley rats were fed chow containing either high or low dietary sodium for 10-14 days. Blood and kidneys were harvested and processed for measurement of plasma, kidney, and renal intermicrovillar cleft and endosomal angiotensin levels. Kidney ANG I averaged 179 +/- 20 fmol/g and ANG II averaged 258 +/- 36 fmol/g in rats fed a high-sodium diet and were significantly higher, averaging 347 +/- 58 fmol/g and 386 +/- 55 fmol/g, respectively, in rats fed a low-salt diet. Renal intermicrovillar clefts and endosomes contained ANG I and ANG II. Intermicrovillar cleft ANG I and ANG II levels averaged 8.4 +/- 2.6 and 74 +/- 26 fmol/mg, respectively, in rats fed a high-salt diet and 7.6 +/- 1.7 and 70 +/- 25 fmol/mg in rats fed a low-salt diet. Endosomal ANG I and ANG II levels averaged 12.3 +/- 4.4 and 43 +/- 19 fmol/mg, respectively, in rats fed a high-salt diet, and these levels were similar to those observed in rats fed a low-salt diet. Renal endosomes from rats fed a low-salt diet demonstrated significantly more AT(1A) receptor binding compared with rats fed a high-salt diet. ACE activity was detectable in renal intermicrovillar clefts and was 2.5-fold higher than the levels observed in renal endosomes. Acute enalaprilat treatment decreased ACE activity in renal intermicrovillar clefts by 90% and in renal endosomes by 84%. Likewise, intermicrovillar cleft and endosomal ANG II levels decreased by 61% and 52%, respectively, in enalaprilat-treated animals. These data demonstrate the presence of intact angiotensin peptides and ACE activity in renal intermicrovillar clefts and endosomes, indicating that intact angiotensin peptides are formed and/or trafficked through intracellular endosomal compartments and are dependent on ACE activity.  (+info)

Comparative effect of angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibition and angiotensin II type 1 receptor antagonism on plasma fibrinolytic balance in humans. (18/721)

Angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE) inhibition significantly decreases plasminogen activator inhibitor-1 (PAI-1) without altering tissue plasminogen activator (tPA) during activation of the renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system in humans. Because ACE inhibitors and angiotensin II type 1 (AT(1)) receptor antagonists differ in their effects on angiotensin II formation and bradykinin degradation, the present study compared the effect of equivalent hypotensive doses of an ACE inhibitor and AT(1) antagonist on fibrinolytic balance. Plasma PAI-1 antigen, tPA antigen, plasma renin activity, and aldosterone were measured in 25 normotensive subjects (19 white, 6 black; 14 men, 11 women; mean age 38.5+/-1.8 years; mean body mass index 25.3+/-0.7 kg/m(2)) during low salt intake alone (10 mmol Na/d), low salt intake + quinapril (40 mg PO bid), and low salt intake + losartan (50 mg PO bid). Compared with low salt alone (systolic blood pressure [BP] 118.8+/-2.2 mm Hg), both quinapril (106.3+/-2.5 mm Hg, P<0.001) and losartan (105.4+/-2. 8 mm Hg, P<0.001) reduced BP. No statistical difference was found between quinapril and losartan in their BP lowering effect. Losartan (P=0.009), but not quinapril, lowered heart rate. Both drugs significantly lowered aldosterone (P<0.001 versus low salt alone for each); however, this effect was significantly greater for quinapril than for losartan (P<0.001 for quinapril versus losartan). Treatment with quinapril, but not with losartan, was associated with a decrease in both PAI-1 antigen (P=0.03) and activity (P=0.018). PAI-1 activity was lower during treatment with quinapril than with losartan (P=0.015). The average PAI-1 antigen concentration was 13. 0+/-2.0 ng/mL during low salt alone, 10.5+/-1.6 ng/mL during quinapril treatment, and 12.3+/-2.1 ng/mL during losartan treatment. In contrast, plasma tPA antigen concentrations were reduced during treatment with losartan (P=0.03) but not with quinapril. This study provides the first evidence that ACE inhibitors and AT(1) antagonists differ in their effects on fibrinolytic balance under conditions of activation of the renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system. Further studies are needed to address the mechanism for the contrasting effects of these 2 classes of drugs on fibrinolysis and to define the clinical significance of these differences.  (+info)

AT(1) receptor regulation in salt-sensitive hypertension. (19/721)

The molecular events governing salt-sensitive hypertension are currently unknown. Because the renin-ANG system plays a central role in blood pressure regulation and electrolyte balance, it may be closely involved in the phenomenon of salt sensitivity. Therefore, we examined the effect of a high-salt diet (8%) and a low-salt diet (0.4%) on ANG II-caused vascular constriction and ANG II type 1 (AT(1)) receptor expression in aorta, brain, and kidney of Dahl S (salt-sensitive) and Dahl R (salt-resistant) rats by means of radioligand binding assays and quantitative PCR. NaCl diet at 8% led to a significant increase of blood pressure in Dahl S but not in Dahl R rats. High-sodium intake caused a profound decrease of ANG II-induced aortic vasoconstriction in both Dahl R and Dahl S rats. The underlying mechanism was a downregulation of aortic AT(1) receptor density and AT(1) receptor mRNA. AT(1) receptor mRNA was downregulated to 57.8% in Dahl R and 59.0% in Dahl S rats by an 8% NaCl diet compared with a 0.4% NaCl diet (P < 0.05). There was a similar decrease in aortic AT(1) receptor density. Additionally, AT(1) receptor mRNA was also downregulated in the kidney but upregulated the brain of Dahl R and S rats on a high-salt diet. Thus high NaCl intake causes organ-specific AT(1) receptor regulation in Dahl R and in Dahl S rats despite the differential blood pressure regulation in these animal models in response to a high-salt diet. These findings suggest that the regulation of vascular AT(1) receptors is influenced by numerous factors such as the renin-ANG system and obviously by various other events that are currently only partly understood.  (+info)

Limitation of arteriolar myogenic activity by local nitric oxide: segment-specific effect of dietary salt. (20/721)

The purpose of this study was to determine if local nitric oxide (NO) activity attenuates the arteriolar myogenic response in rat spinotrapezius muscle. We also investigated the possibility that hypertension, dietary salt, or their combination can alter any influence of local NO on the myogenic response. Wistar-Kyoto rats (WKY) and spontaneously hypertensive rats (SHR) fed low-salt (0.45%, LS) or high-salt (7%, HS) diets were enclosed in a ventilated airtight box with the spinotrapezius muscle exteriorized for intravital microscopy. Mean arterial pressure was unaffected by dietary salt in WKY but was significantly higher and augmented by dietary salt in SHR. In all experiments, elevation of microvascular pressure by box pressurization caused a 0-30% decrease in the diameter of large (arcade bridge) arterioles and a 21-27% decrease in the diameter of intermediate (arcade) arterioles. Inhibition of NO synthase with N(G)-monomethyl-L-arginine (L-NMMA) significantly enhanced myogenic responsiveness of arcade bridge arterioles in WKY-LS and SHR-LS but not in WKY-HS and SHR-HS. L-NMMA significantly enhanced the myogenic responsiveness of arcade arterioles in all four groups. Excess L-arginine reversed this effect of L-NMMA in all cases, and arteriolar responsiveness to the NO donor sodium nitroprusside was not different among the four groups. High-salt intake had no effect on the passive distension of arterioles in either strain during box pressurization. We conclude that 1) local NO normally attenuates arteriolar myogenic responsiveness in WKY and SHR, 2) dietary salt impairs local NO activity in arcade bridge arterioles of both strains, and 3) passive arteriolar distensibility is not altered by a high-salt diet in either strain.  (+info)

Body fluid expansion is not essential for salt-induced hypertension in SS/Jr rats. (21/721)

To evaluate the importance of volume in the development of hypertension in inbred Dahl salt-sensitive rats (SS/Jr), we measured the changes in blood pressure (BP) that occurred with oral intake of food (salt) and water in rats whose body weight was permitted to increase versus those in which body weight was maintained constant with a servo-control system. We hypothesized that if volume expansion is essential in the development of hypertension, then BP would not increase if body weight was held constant. We found that oral presentation of chow containing 4% salt to SS/Jr rats caused BP to increase 32.2 +/- 2.9 mmHg over 4 days when body weight was controlled at its initial value. Plasma sodium increased from 142.0 to 145.2 meq/l during 4 days of high salt. Neither plasma volume, hematocrit, nor central venous pressure changed significantly on the high-salt diet. In contrast, the inbred Dahl salt-resistant rats (SR/Jr) did not increase their BP during body weight control when given 4% salt. This demonstrates that volume expansion is not an obligatory step in the pressure response to increased salt in SS/Jr rats. Our results obtained with oral presentation of salt, in contrast to intravenous, represent a physiological evaluation of the significance of volume changes in response to dietary salt because no potential regulatory reflexes have been bypassed.  (+info)

High- or low-salt diet from weaning to adulthood: effect on insulin sensitivity in Wistar rats. (22/721)

Because of conflicting results in the literature, further studies are needed to confirm an association between the degree of salt consumption and insulin sensitivity. The aim of this study was to measure insulin sensitivity in rats fed from weaning to adulthood with a low (LSD), normal (NSD), or high (HSD) salt diet. Body weight, carcass lipid content, blood glucose, nonesterified fatty acids, plasma insulin, plasma renin activity, and a glucose transporter (GLUT4) were measured. A euglycemic hyperinsulinemic clamp was used in 52 anesthetized rats. Body weight was higher in rats on LSD than in those on NSD (P<0.05) or HSD (P<0.001). Percentage fat carcass content was higher (P<0.05) in rats on LSD than in those on NSD. Basal plasma insulin and glucose levels were not altered (P>0.05) by salt consumption. Nonesterified fatty acids were lower in rats on HSD than in those on LSD (P<0.05) or NSD (P<0.01). Glucose uptake was lower in rats on LSD than in those on NSD (P<0.05) or HSD (P<0. 001). When a euglycemic hyperinsulinemic clamp was used on pair-weight rats, similar results were obtained, which suggests that the effect of LSD on insulin sensitivity was not due to higher body weight. GLUT4 in insulin-sensitive tissues was increased in rats on HSD except in the cardiac muscle. Captopril treatment partially reversed low insulin sensitivity in LSD rats, whereas losartan did not change it, which indicates that the effect of LSD on insulin sensitivity is angiotensin independent. In conclusion, the present results demonstrate that chronic dietary salt restriction induces a decrease in insulin sensitivity not associated with renin-angiotensin system activity or body weight changes.  (+info)

Role of female sex hormones in the development and reversal of dahl hypertension. (23/721)

Female sex hormones protect against the development of Dahl hypertension mediated by increases in dietary sodium. The role of female sex hormones in the reversal of Dahl hypertension mediated by decreases in dietary sodium is unknown. The goal of this study was to identify sex differences in the reversal of Dahl hypertension and the associated changes in water and electrolyte homeostasis. Male (M, n=8), female (F, n=8), and ovariectomized female (OVX, n=9) Dahl salt-sensitive rats were instrumented with an abdominal radiotelemetry device for 24-hour monitoring of blood pressure (BP) and heart rate. Daily measurements of food intake, water intake, and urine output were recorded as diet was changed from a low-sodium diet (0.15% NaCl) to a diet containing 8% NaCl. The diet was then changed back to 0.15% NaCl. The responses to changes in the salt diet were compared with responses observed in rats (M, n=4; F, n=4; OVX, n=4) that were maintained on 0.15% NaCl during the experiment. Sex differences in BP were observed when M, F, and OVX rats were fed 8% NaCl diet for 2 weeks (152+/-4, 141+/-3, and 154+/-5 mm Hg, respectively). BP was significantly greater (P<0.05) in M and OVX rats than in F rats. Fluid balance (water intake minus urine volume) and sodium balance (sodium intake minus sodium excretion) were similar in all groups on the 8% NaCl diet. BP in time-control M, F, and OVX rats was 121+/-3, 130+/-4, and 162+/-11 mm Hg, respectively. Compared with time-control groups, differences in BP while rats were eating the 8% NaCl diet were observed in M and F rats but not OVX rats. Reinstatement of an NaCl-deficient diet reversed the hypertension in M and F but not OVX rats (124+/-4, 124+/-2, and 145+/-5 mm Hg, respectively). The changes in dietary sodium caused similar changes in renal handling of sodium and water in all groups of rats; therefore, the effect on blood pressure was independent of renal excretory function. The inability to reverse the hypertension by decreasing sodium intake in OVX rats and the development of spontaneous hypertension in OVX females maintained on a low-sodium diet indicates that removal of the female sex hormones predisposes the animal to the development of hypertension that is sodium independent. We conclude that female sex hormones protect Dahl S rats against the development of sodium-dependent and -independent hypertension.  (+info)

Elevated salt intake impairs dilation of rat skeletal muscle resistance arteries via ANG II suppression. (24/721)

Vasodilator responses were assessed in resistance arteries (100-200 microm) isolated from the gracilis muscle of normotensive rats after changes in dietary salt intake. Sprague-Dawley rats were maintained on either a high-salt (HS) diet (4.0% NaCl) or a low-salt (LS) diet (0.4% NaCl) for 4-8 wk (chronic) or 3 days (short-term) with water ad libitum. One group of short-term HS rats received a continuous intravenous infusion of a low dose (5 ng x kg(-1) x min(-1)) of ANG II to prevent the ANG II suppression that occurs with HS diet. Short-term and chronic HS diet eliminated arterial dilation in response to ACh and reduced PO(2) (30-40 mmHg) and the stable prostacyclin analog iloprost. ANG II infusion preserved the response to these vasodilator stimuli in short-term HS animals. Dilator responses to sodium nitroprusside and forskolin were unaffected by HS diet. These findings suggest that ANG II suppression during HS diet impairs vascular relaxation mechanisms upstream from the cAMP and cGMP second messenger systems.  (+info)